Lesson 11
Package Printing
第 11课 包装印刷
Introduction
The objective of package printing and decorating is to
create a visibly identifiable image,consistently,for a
large number of impressions,these have been divided
into two groups,
? "Printing" in the context of this discussion refers to
flexography,lithography and gravure--the methods that
account for the vast majority of all packaging graphic art,
Each of these methods has a number of variations,
? "Decorating" is used to describe a number of special
methods such as screen printing,hot foil stamping,
embossing,and pad printing,
Printing Methods
Printing an image requires the ability to transfer fluid ink
or another marking medium onto the substrate in the
desired pattern,There are dozens of ways of doing this,
but the bulk of package printing can be grouped in three
basic categories based on the fundamental geometry of
the printing plate,
? Relief, Variations are flexography (commonly referred
to as flexo),letterpress,and offset letterpress (commonly
referred to as dry offset)
Printing Methods
? Planographic,The process is known as offset
lithography and commonly referred to as lithography,
offset or litho
? Gravure,The process is rotogravure,sometimes
called roto and occasionally referred to as intaglio
Printing presses have the following features in common
regard1ess of the actual printing method used,
? An accurate material feed system that will present
substrate to the printing station in precise register,
? An ink reservoir or ink fountain and a method of
introducing ink into the printing train,
Printing Methods
? A means of metering ink so that the amount applied is
consistent over the print run,
? A way of configuring the ink to the required pattern,
This is done by the printing plates,one for each color,
? A means of transferring ink to the substrate by
pressing the substrate between the ink-bearing surface
and an impression roll,
? Since inks are applied as fluids,a means of drying or ]
solidifying them,
Printing Methods
Printing presses are variously configured,depending
on the print method and on whether the machine is sheet
fed or web fed,Light materials and those that are
extensible or have poor dimensional stability must be
web fed; the material is supplied from a roll and is usually
rewound into a roll after it is printed,Web-fed machines
typically run faster,and large runs may be better on a
web-fed machine,
Some types of filling machines must be supplied with
packaging material from a roll,
Printing Methods
Most papers can be either web or sheet fed,in which
case other factors must be considered,For instance,
corrugated board and other stiff or rigid materials that
cannot wrap around feed rolls must be sheet fed,
While in principle most art can be printed with four
stations,printing presses with eight or more printing
stations are not unusual,The added stations allow the
printer more options and flexibility on how to produce
exacting designs of the highest quality,The added
stations have many uses,including these printing
situations,
Printing Methods
? Fluorescent and metallic colors that cannot be printed
with standard CMYK inks
? Line art,or process art combined with line art,that
requires a large number of PMS colors,
? Double applications of the same color needed to
develop desired depth
? Corporate colors that are often specified PMS or
proprietary formulations
? Protective or decorative coatings such as high-gloss
lacquers or varnishes·Fluorescent and metallic colors
that cannot be printed with standard CMYK inks
Printing Methods
? Difficult to duplicate colors such as orange,dark
browns and some greens
? Exceptionally bright color,if needed
? Large solid (line art) areas
? Pattern-applied adhesives,
The printing process that is selected for a particular
task is dependent on many factors,
? The volume or number of impressions desired (10,000
or 10 million impressions)
Printing Methods
? The art type and desired effect (line art,process color,
vignettes,metallic sheen)
? The substrate (paper,plastic film,surface quality,
colored,porous,flexible,rigid)
? The physical shape of the substrate (roll stock,sheets,
discrete items,round,irregular shape)
? Special package process or use conditions (chemical
resistance,thermal resistance)
Relief Printing
? Plate Production,
Modern relief printing plates are made from rubber,
photopolymer or occasionally metal,depending on the
application,Plates are modest in cost and can be made
quickly,Nearly all are made by photographically
imposing the image recorded on a photonegative onto a
light-sensitive material,In the case of photopolymers,the
polymer hardens where exposed to ultraviolet (UV) light
and remains fluid where unexposed,The unexposed part
is then dissolved away,(See Figure 11.1)
Relief Printing
Figure 11.1 UV light projected through the
image photonegative will cure photopolymer,Uncured
polymer can be washed away,leaving the raised image
areas
Relief Printing
? Flexography
In a typical flexographic printing station (see Figure 11.2)
excess ink is applied to an engraved transfer,or anilox
roll,The engravings on the anilox roll meter the correct
amount of ink,depending on the engraving geometry and
depth,The ink is transferred to the raised surfaces of the
printing plate attached to the plate cylinder,Line art
printing plates have a solid,smooth surface,Halftone
and process printing plate surfaces are composed of
small dots standing out in relief,The substrate is passed
between the plate cylinder and the impression cylinder to
achieve ink transfer,
Relief Printing
Figure 11.2 A typical flexographic print deck,A chambered
doctor blade ink fountain applies ink to the anilox roll,In other
systems,ink is applied with rolls rotating in the ink fountain
Relief Printing
? Flexographic press stations can be arranged in
several ways,(See Figure 11.3) The stack press has
individual color stations stacked one above the other,
with drying zones between the stations,Each plate
cylinder has its own impression cylinder,The central
impression (CI) press has printing stations grouped
around a single large central impression drum,
Extensible webs such as polyethylene are best printed
on a CI press,because the central impression drum
keeps web distortion to a minimum,
Relief Printing
Figure 11.3 A six-color flexographic stack press (left) and a
six-color flexographic
central impression (CI) press (right)
Relief Printing
? Letterpress and Offset Letterpress (Dry Offset),
Letterpress refers to relief printing processes that use
hard plastic or sometimes metal printing plates,Where
flexographic printing inks are fairly fluid and can be
metered with engraved rolls,letterpress inks are heavy
pastes similar to litho-graphic inks,and must be metered
by a complicated series of rollers,
Cylindrical objects such as two-piece metal cans have no
circumferential register point against which to register
printing stations,This problem is resolved by a process
modification variously known as offset letterpress,dry
offset,or letterset,(See Figure 11.4)
Relief Printing
Figure 11.4 Offset letterpress (dry offset) assembles the
entire image on a blanket roll and transfers the image to a
round container in one rotation of the container
Relief Printing
In offset letterpress the inked images from the
letterpress printing plates are transferred onto an
intermediate resilient rubber blanket roll,where all the
colors can be assembled in complete register,The heavy
paste nature of letterpress inks prevents them from
running or spreading while the image is being assembled,
The blanket roll is then rolled against the round object,
and all the colors that make up the image are transferred
at one time and in complete register,The colors applied
to the blanket are wet and must stay wet until transferred
to the container,
Lithography
Lithography is a planographic process,meaning that
printing and nonprinting areas are all on the same plane,
Unlike a relief plate,a lithographic printing plate is fiat
and smooth,
The mutually exclusive nature of oil and water forms the
basis of modern lithography,Lithographic ink is by
definition always oil based,It is a heavy paste and is
metered to the plate cylinder by a train of inking rollers,
Another group of rollers applies a thin film of water to the
water-receptive areas,(See Figure 11.5)
Lithography
Figure 11.5 A lithographic printing station
Lithography
Most lithographic presses for packaging applications
are sheet fed,although there are some web-fed presses,
The planographic nature of the process requires that the
substrate surface be reasonably smooth in order to get
good ink transfer,Lithographic plates can be made with
200-line and finer screens,although 133 and 150 are
more common in packaging,Accordingly,the lithographic
image is sharp and has excellent detail,The edges of
line art are sharp and straight,A unique advantage of
lithography not available with the other methods is that
some color adjustment can be made on-press,
Gravure Printing
Gravure printing uses engraved copper-plated steel
cylinders to measure and apply patterns of ink to the
Substrate (See Figure 11.6),In the most common
process,a stylus controlled directly by digital information
engraves the desired cell pattern into the cylinder’s soft
copper surface,The cylinder is then chrome plated to
give it a hard wear-resistant surface,
Gravure Printing
Figure 11.6 A gravure cylinder may have millions of tiny
cells,or wells,whose volume
can be controlled to carry different amounts of ink
Gravure Printing
Normal gravure printing is always done from rolls and
in web form,The entire surface of the gravure cylinder is
flooded with a low-viscosity ink and then wiped clean
with a straight-edged metal doctor blade,After the
cylinder has been wiped,only the ink inside the recessed
cell pattern remains on the cylinder,(See Figure 11.7),
Gravure printing gives superior print quality and
unmatched control over long production runs,Make-
ready is simple,Since there is no plate joint on a gravure
cylinder,it is possible to print continuous patterns,
Comparing Flexography,Lithography,and Gravure
The quality of printed images varies widely among
flexography,lithography,and gravure,It is easy to
distinguish between the three processes when the
printing is not done to the highest of standards (see
Figure 11.8),but the process is identifiable only by
careful examination with a magnifying glass when the
printing is of the first quality,The UPC code is usually
the best line art to examine for print Identification,
Comparing Flexography,Lithography,and Gravure
Elexo printing
“halo” effect
Litho printing
smooth edges
Gravure printing
sawtooth edges
Figure 11.8 The printing method can often be determined by
examining the edges of line art under magnification
Comparing Flexography,Lithography,and Gravure
Gravure printing presses are always web fed and are
used primarily for large-volume runs on any smooth-
surfaced stock,There are a limited number of
combination presses available that combine lithography
and gravure or flexography and gravure in order to take
advantage of the strengths of two processes,
Other Package Decoration Techniques
Not all package decorating and marking requirements
can be met with flexography,lithography,or gravure,For
distinctive effects,special substrates,or irregular shapes,
a number of additional processes and variations can be
called into use,
? Stencil or Screen Printing,The term "silk screen",
while commonly used,is technically incorrect since
modern screen printing uses fine metal or plastic screens,
Other Package Decoration Techniques
The screen is masked off into a pattern that leaves
porous screen areas where ink is desired and sealed
areas where no ink transfer is indicated,The screen is
placed against the surface to be printed,and a wiper
blade moves an ink puddle across the screen,(See
Figure 11.9) Where the screen has been left porous,the
ink drops through onto the substrate,Stencil screen are
easily and economically made by exposing a screen
coated with photosensitive material in a manner similar
to that used in lithography and flexography,
Other Package Decoration Techniques
Figure 11.9 Screen printing can be done
on flat or round objects,
Other Package Decoration Techniques
? Reflective Metallics,
Only an intact metal surface can provide a reflective
glossy metallic sheen,In packaging this is done by
printing on aluminum metal foil or aluminum metallized
surfaces,The graphic will have a hard,glossy surface
even in those areas printed with opaque ink,
All glossy reflective metallics are based on aluminum,
Metallizing is a full-web process; metallized designs
and patterns are not practical,
Other Package Decoration Techniques
? Heat-Transfer and Hot-Stamp Printing,
Heat-transfer and hot-stamp printing are similar in that
they both use heat to transfer images from a carrier web
to the substrate to be decorated,They are both clean
processes since there are no inks to dry,Both processes
require a substrate that is reasonably heat tolerant,(See
Figure 11.10)
Other Package Decoration Techniques
Figure 11.10 Hot stamp printing uses a heated die
that has the image engraved into its surface
Other Package Decoration Techniques
Metallic decoration is the principal hot-stamp
application,To provide the metallic sheen,the
decorative coating is created with a vacuum metallized
aluminum layer,
? Pad Printing,
Pad printing is a relative of gravure printing,The inked
image is created on an etched flat plate (the cliché) in a
manner similar to gravure,A large,resilient silicone
rubber pillow is pressed against the inked cliché,The ink
pattern is transferred to the pad,which is subsequently
pressed against the substrate,(See Figure 11.11),
Other Package Decoration Techniques
Figure 11.11 Pad printing is used to decorate irregularly shaped objects,
The pad is first pressed against the inked cliché and then moved over
and pressed against the object to be printed
Other Package Decoration Techniques
Embossing,Embossing is the practice of pressing a
substrate,usually paper,so that a design stands out in
relief,A key requirement of embossing is that the
substrate be capable of deforming under pressure and of
holding the newly created contour,
Embossing dies are made by direct engraving or by
casting from a master engraving,Most embossing is
done in register with a printed pattern already laid down
in previous steps,Web stock can be embossed
continuously by embossing rolls to impart an overall
texture to the substrate,
Other Package Decoration Techniques
? Other Decorating and Marking Methods,Other
important decorating and marking methods for packaging
include,
Gloss coatings,Printing inks alone do not normally have
a high-gloss surface,Clear surface coatings are applied
where such an effect is needed,Ultraviolet-cured
coatings have particularly good surface sheen,
Reverse Printing,Clear plastic films are often "reverse
printed," or printed on the back so that the image shows
through the film,The film surface provides gloss as well
as protecting the ink from surface abrasion,
Other Package Decoration Techniques
? Laser Marking,Laser marking is different from that
produced by common office laser printers in that the
image is burned into the substrate surface rather than
developed by the application of ink,
? Ink-jet Printers,Ink-jet printers eject a train of ink
droplets that are deflected into the desired patterns when
they pass between electrically charged plates,Ink-jet
printers are increasingly being used to print variable
information on packages and labels,
Printing Inks
A typical printing ink contains the following ingredient
classes,
Pigments Ingredients that provide the color
Vehicle A resinous component that binds pigment
particles and adheres them to the substrate
Solvents Dissolve resins and fluidize the formula so it
will flow and wet the substrate
Additives Wetting agents,dryers,antioxidants,
viscosity control agents,tackifiers,and the
like
Printing Inks
Inks solidify by the following processes,
·Evaporation of solvent or water
·Absorption of solvent or water
·Oxidation
·Chemical reaction